| Literature DB >> 32514598 |
Shadman Aziz1, Yaseen M Arabi2, Waleed Alhazzani3, Laura Evans4, Giuseppe Citerio5, Katherine Fischkoff6, Jorge Salluh7, Geert Meyfroidt8, Fayez Alshamsi9, Simon Oczkowski3, Elie Azoulay10, Amy Price11, Lisa Burry12, Amy Dzierba13, Andrew Benintende6, Jill Morgan14, Giacomo Grasselli15, Andrew Rhodes16, Morten H Møller17, Larry Chu11, Shelly Schwedhelm18, John J Lowe19, Du Bin20, Michael D Christian21.
Abstract
Given the rapidly changing nature of COVID-19, clinicians and policy makers require urgent review and summary of the literature, and synthesis of evidence-based guidelines to inform practice. The WHO advocates for rapid reviews in these circumstances. The purpose of this rapid guideline is to provide recommendations on the organizational management of intensive care units caring for patients with COVID-19 including: planning a crisis surge response; crisis surge response strategies; triage, supporting families, and staff.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Critical care; Guideline; Pandemics; Surge capacity; Triage
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32514598 PMCID: PMC7276667 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-020-06092-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 41.787
Recommendations and statements
| Recommendation | Strength | |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | For institutions preparing ICUs during the COVID-19 pandemic | |
| 1.1. | Weak recommendation low quality evidence | |
| 1.2. | Weak recommendation low quality evidence | |
| 2. | ||
| 2.1. | Establish predictions as early as possible in the course of the epidemic | Best practice statement |
| 2.2. | Models should be pragmatic and focus on the only relevant question for surge capacity: how many patients will need hospital and ICU resources on a given day? | Best practice statement |
| 2.3. | Predictions should model a best, worse, and most likely scenario and use different statistical approaches and compare the results | Best practice statement |
| 2.4. | Predictive models should take into account the R0 of the virus, if known; the rate of spreading in other countries and settings; the expected or observed rate of hospitalization, need for ICU, need for mechanical ventilation, need for ECMO; case fatality rate; expected duration of mechanical ventilation, ICU length of stay (LOS), hospital LOS | Best practice statement |
| 2.5. | Models should incorporate the impact of the installation of distancing measures in society and their delay until impact on case detection, actual or theoretical | Best practice statement |
| 2.6. | Once peak surge has been reached, models should be used to plan the surge exit strategy and to continuously monitor new data to detect a second peak as early as possible | Best practice statement |
| 3. | Best practice statement | |
| 4. | To mitigate a shortage of mechanical ventilators: | |
| 4.1 | Weak recommendation low quality evidence | |
| 4.2 | Strong recommendation moderate quality evidence | |
| 4.3 | Best practice statement | |
| 4.4 | In setting with shortage of standard full-featured ventilators, | Weak recommendation low quality evidence |
| 4.5 | In setting with shortage of standard full-featured ventilators, | Weak recommendation low quality evidence |
| 4.6 | When planning for increased mechanical ventilation capacity, | Best practice statement |
| 5. | Strong recommendation low quality evidence | |
| 6. | Where there is shortage of intensive care staff, | |
| 6.1 | Suspending all elective medical and surgical procedures and activities once ongoing chains or community transmission of COVID-19 has been documented within a State/Province/Country, in order to conserve critical care capacity | Weak recommendation low quality evidence |
| 6.2 | Expediting the credentialing process to quickly approve both domestic and foreign healthcare workers to assist in areas of need | Weak recommendation low quality evidence |
| 6.3 | Reclaiming critical care trained staff who are in other departments and hiring retired critical care trained staff | Weak recommendation low quality evidence |
| 6.4 | Temporarily redeploying healthcare workers and trainees to the ICU to work in a care-team model even if the ICU is normally outside the scope of their practice | Weak recommendation low quality evidence |
| 6.5 | Providing just-in-time training and simulation sessions for non-ICU clinicians reassigned to work in ICU, to better prepare them for their roles | Weak recommendation low quality evidence |
| 6.6 | Creating and maintaining a safe working environment with the necessary supplies, personal protective equipment and education to protect staff and trainees | Weak recommendation low quality evidence |
| 6.7 | Employing telemedicine and other technology to increase the number of overseeing critical care providers | Weak recommendation low quality evidence |
| 6.8 | Restructuring ICU teams to employ a tiered staffing model (‘care team’) that augments the ability of the available experienced critical care staff to care for as many patients as possible | Weak recommendation low quality evidence |
| 7. | During the COVID-19 pandemic to reduce healthcare worker exposure to SARS-CoV-2 | |
| 7.1. | Best practice statement | |
| 7.2. | Weak recommendation low quality evidence | |
| 7.3. | Best practice statement | |
| 7.4. | Weak recommendation low quality evidence | |
| 7.5. | Best practice statement | |
| 8 | In the event of a supply shortage necessitating the reuse of PPE | |
| 8.1 | Weak recommendation very low certainty of evidence | |
| 8.2 | Weak recommendation very low certainty of evidence | |
| 8.3 | Weak recommendation very low certainty of evidence | |
| 9 | Best practice statement | |
| 10. | When State/Province/Countries develop a triage protocol, | |
| 10.1 | That hospital leadership work closely with the government to ensure legal protections prior to instituting a triage system | Best practice statement |
| 10.2 | Apprising clinicians of their protections when acting in good faith and in accordance with established triage protocols to ensure consistent application of triage decision-making | Best practice statement |
| 10.3 | Meticulous documentation of all triage decisions | Best practice statement |
| 11. | For an adult COVID-19 patient, | Weak recommendation low quality evidence |
| 12. | Strong recommendation low quality evidence | |
| 13. | In the event that bedside visitation by family members is not feasible due to surge conditions or PPE shortages, | |
| 13.1 | Using available communication technology including mobile phones, videoconferencing, and messaging to enable family members to communicate with patients and staff | Best practice statement |
| 13.2 | Using a 24/7 manned hospital phone line to address questions, concerns, special requests of family members | Best practice statement |
| 13.3 | Engaging family members in rounds and patient care discussions (virtually) and providing technological solutions by the hospital to enable this | Best practice statement |
| 13.4 | Engaging chaplains/spiritual care, social workers, ethics consultants, patient advocates to provide support to patients and their families | Best practice statement |
| 14. | For employers, healthcare systems, and institutions during the COVID-19 pandemic | |
| 14.1 | Weak recommendation low quality evidence | |
| 14.2 | Best practice statement | |
| 14.3 | Best practice statement | |
Fig. 1Projected versus observed number of hospitalized patients per day, for Belgium. Model created by Lize Raes and Kareljan Raes, and available on https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_tT–cLqvRyRHBjYmkkZu6MC0leXev8p/view
The projected supplies required to manage an intubated intensive care unit patient during the COVID-19 (or pandemic) surge
| Supplies and equipment | Projected requirements, per patienta | References |
|---|---|---|
| PPE | 85 staff encounters per day (ICU | [ |
| 40 staff encounters per day (ward) | ||
| Sterile and non-sterile gowns | ||
| N95 respirators | ||
| Surgical masks | ||
| Sterile and non-sterile gloves | ||
| Airway management and oxygen delivery | 1–1.3 oxygen mask or cannula (ward/not intubated) | [ |
| 0.5 BiPAP mask (ICU) | ||
| 1–1.6 endotracheal tube stylet (ICU) | ||
| 1–1.6 endotracheal tube (ICU) | ||
| 1–1.6 endotracheal tube holder (ICU) | ||
| 1–1.3 Yankauer suction (ICU) | ||
| 1–1.3 suction trap (ICU) | ||
| 1 suction source and regulator (ICU) | ||
| 1.5 oral airways (ICU) | ||
| 1.3 bag-valve mask with face mask (ICU) | ||
| 1.3 suction catheter (ICU) | ||
| Ventilators | 1 ventilator circuit | [ |
| 1 HMEF (if not using heated humidifier circuits) | ||
| 1 bacterial/viral filter | ||
| 1 ventilator (ICU) | ||
| 1 oxygen regulator (ward, ICU) | ||
| 2 L sterile water per day for humidification (ICU) | ||
| 1.3 metered dose inhaler adapters (ICU) | ||
| Oxygen/air | Compressed air (ward, ICU) | [ |
| Compressed oxygen (ward, ICU) | ||
| Liquid oxygen (ward, ICU) | ||
| Patient monitors and testing | 1–2 continuous pulse oximeter (ICU) | [ |
| 1 cardiac monitor (ICU) | ||
| 1 noninvasive blood pressure cuff (ICU) | ||
| 1.6 thermometer probes (ICU) | ||
| 1 capnograph with tubing (ICU) | ||
| 1 electrocardiogram machine with cables per 10 beds (ICU) | ||
| 10 electrocardiogram patches per day (ICU) | ||
| 13 blood culture tubes—aerobic/anaerobic (ICU) | ||
| 2 tubes for each test type per day (ICU) | ||
| 1 portable ultrasound per 10 beds (ICU) | ||
| 1 glucometer per 10 beds (ICU) | ||
| 1 point-of-care blood analyzer per 10 beds (ICU) | ||
| Catheters/lines/tubes | 2 IV sets (ward) | [ |
| 4–6 IV sets (ICU) | ||
| 1–1.3 Foley catheter (ICU) | ||
| 1–1.3 soft restraint set (ICU) | ||
| 1–1.3 central line set (ICU) | ||
| 1–1.3 arterial line set (ICU) | ||
| 1–1.3 orogastric tube (ICU) | ||
| 30 needles per day (ICU) | ||
| 30 syringes per day (ICU) | ||
| 1.2 3-way connectors (ICU) | ||
| 30 IV-line cap (ICU) | ||
| Infusion pump | 2 infusion pumps (ICU) | [ |
| Other life sustaining therapies | Hemodialysis machines | [ |
| ECMO | ||
| Pumpless extracorporeal lung assist oscillator/high frequency jet ventilator | ||
| Inhaled nitric oxide | ||
| Nutrition | Enteral and parenteral nutrition | [ |
| Nutrition pump | ||
| Crash cart for ACLS | 1 per ICU | [ |
| Patient warming/cooling | 1.3 regular blankets (ward/ICU) | [ |
| 1.3 insulating blankets (ICU) | ||
| 1.3 Bair Hugger blankets (ICU) | ||
| 2 Bair Hugger/ICU | ||
| Personal care | 2 sheets, pillows (ICU) | [ |
| 2 diapers (ICU) | ||
| 1.3 scissors (ICU) | ||
| 3 plasters (ICU) | ||
| 5 shaving equipment (ICU) | ||
| 3 pressure dressings | ||
| 1.3 patient bags for personal belongings |
What are the projected supplies required to manage an intubated ICU patient during the COVID-19 (or pandemic) surge?
Data from the included references are summarized in the tables above. The first table describes projected supplies and equipment; the second projected medication requirements. Estimates from studies based upon pandemic influenza with 5–8 days of mechanical ventilation or mass-casualty situation with average 10-day ICU stay. As patients with COVID-19 often have longer ICU stays and requirements for mechanical ventilation, these projections are likely underestimates. Lastly, high-flow nasal oxygen cannula are not described in any of the references, and these have unique requirements (device, cannula, flow meters, liquid oxygen)
aThe data in this table was based upon guidance developed primarily for an influenza pandemic with a shorter average ICU LOS, adjustments should be applied for diseases such as COVID-19 with a longer average ICU LOS
bSelection bias in the published literature likely influenced the specific drugs listed. Class substitutions should be considered based upon local preferences/practices. Drug shortages should be anticipated during a pandemic and therefore alternate drugs within class for substitution should be considered and planned for in advance
Fig. 2Care team model for extending the capacity of ICU clinicians
| 1. | For institutions preparing ICUs during the COVID-19 pandemic: |
| 1.1. | |
| 1.2. | |
| 2. | We |
| 2.1 | Establish predictions as early as possible in the course of the epidemic |
| 2.2 | Models should be pragmatic and focus on the only relevant question for surge capacity: how many patients will need hospital and ICU resources on a given day? |
| 2.3 | Predictions should model a best, worse, and most likely scenario and use different statistical approaches and compare the results |
| 2.4 | Predictive models should take into account the R0 of the virus, if known; the rate of spreading in other countries and settings; the expected or observed rate of hospitalization, need for ICU, need for mechanical ventilation, need for ECMO; case fatality rate; expected duration of mechanical ventilation, ICU length of stay (LOS), hospital LOS |
| 2.5 | Models should incorporate the impact of the installation of distancing measures in society and their delay until impact on case detection, actual or theoretical |
| 2.6 | Once peak surge has been reached, models should be used to plan the surge exit strategy and to continuously monitor new data to detect a second peak as early as possible |
| 3. | |
| 4. | To mitigate a shortage of mechanical ventilators: |
| 4.1 | We |
| 4.2 | We |
| 4.3 | We |
| 4.4 | In setting with shortage of standard full-featured ventilators, we |
| 4.5 | In setting with shortage of standard full-featured ventilators, we |
| 4.6 | When planning for increased mechanical ventilation capacity, we |
| 5. | We |
| 6. | Where there is shortage of intensive care staff, |
| 6.1 | Suspending all elective medical and surgical procedures and activities once ongoing chains or community transmission of COVID-19 has been documented within a State/Province/Country, in order to conserve critical care capacity |
| 6.2 | Expediting the credentialing process to quickly approve both domestic and foreign healthcare workers to assist in areas of need |
| 6.3 | Reclaiming critical care trained staff who are in other departments and hiring retired critical care trained staff |
| 6.4 | Temporarily redeploying healthcare workers and trainees to the ICU to work in a care-team model even if the ICU is normally outside the scope of their practice |
| 6.5 | Providing just-in-time training and simulation sessions for non-ICU clinicians reassigned to work in ICU, to better prepare them for their roles |
| 6.6 | Creating and maintaining a safe working environment with the necessary supplies, personal protective equipment and education to protect staff and trainees |
| 6.7 | Employing telemedicine and other technology to increase the number of overseeing critical care providers |
| 6.8 | Restructuring ICU teams to employ a tiered staffing model (‘care team’) that augments the ability of the available experienced critical care staff to care for as many patients as possible |
| 7. | During the COVID-19 pandemic to reduce healthcare worker exposure to SARS-CoV-2: |
| 7.1 | |
| 7.2 | We |
| 7.3 | |
| 7.4 | We |
| 7.5 | |
| 8. | In the event of a supply shortage necessitating the reuse of PPE: |
| 8.1 | |
| 8.2 | We |
| 8.3 | We |
| 9. | We |
| 10. | When State/Province/Countries develop a triage protocol, we |
| 10.1 | That hospital leadership works closely with the government to ensure legal protections prior to instituting a triage system. (Best practice statement) |
| 10.2 | Apprising clinicians of their protections when acting in good faith and in accordance with established triage protocols to ensure consistent application of triage decision-making. (Best practice statement) |
| 10.3 | Meticulous documentation of all triage decisions. (Best practice statement) |
| 11. | For an adult COVID-19 patient, we |
| 12. | We |
| 13. | In the event that bedside visitation by family members is not feasible due to surge conditions or PPE shortages, we |
| 13.1 | Using available communication technology including mobile phones, videoconferencing, and messaging to enable family members to communicate with patients and staff |
| 13.2 | Using a 24/7 manned hospital phone line to address questions, concerns, special requests of family members |
| 13.3 | Engaging family members in rounds and patient care discussions (virtually) and providing technological solutions by the hospital to enable this |
| 13.4 | Engaging chaplains/spiritual care, social workers, ethics consultants, patient advocates to provide support to patients and their families |
| 14. | For employers, healthcare systems, and institutions during the COVID-19 pandemic: |
| 14.1 | We |
| 14.2 | We |
| 14.3 | We |